Chemical and crystallographic study of carbamoyl-chymotrypsin A

May 9, 1972 - James C. Powers, Juliana L. Asgian, Özlem Doǧan Ekici, and Karen Ellis James ... Keiji Hemmi , J. Wade Harper , and James C. Powers...
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CARBAMYL-CHYMOTRYPSIN

A

A Chemical and Crystallographic Study of Carbamyl-Chymotrypsin At George T. Robillard? James C. Powers,$ and Philip E. Wilcox$

The reaction of p-nitrophenyl cyanate with chymotrypsinogen A and chymotrypsin A has been studied to determine the potential of this reagent in the field of enzyme modifications. These experiments have shown that p-nitrophenyl [14C]cyanate can react at specific loci on the enzyme under mild conditions. These conditions can be controlled in such a manner as to virtually eliminate nonspecific side reactions. p-Nitrophenyl [ 14C]cyanatereacts differently with the various species of chymotrypsin A. The reagent reacts simultaneously at two sites in chymotrypsin A, and As, the activesite Ser-195 and the amino terminal of Cys-1, to give a dicarbamylated product. However, in chymotrypsin A,, the reagent reacts principally at Ser-195 giving at first a monocarbamylated product. This difference in behavior has been shown to be due to a difference in the reactivity of the amino terminal of Cys-1 in the various enzyme species. Crystals of

ABSTRACT:

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wo other laboratories have tried to obtain specifically carbamylated derivatives of serine proteases using potassium cyanate (Shaw et al., 1964; Svendsen, 1967). However, considerable amounts of nonspecific side reaction occurred during the inhibition of the enzymes, reflecting an inability to successfully control the reactivity of the reagent. Recently a new class of cyanates, aryl cyanates, have been developed (Grigat and Putter, 1967) whose reactivity can be controlled by the nature of the substituents on the aromatic ring. Their usefulness has already been recognized in synthetic organic chemistry, but they have not yet been introduced into the field of enzyme modification. The initial purpose of the present investigation was to study the usefulness of these compounds as reagents for protein chemistry. In the studies described here, p-nitrophenyl cyanate was used to prepare a stable, inhibited derivative of bovine chymotrypsin A with no nonspecific side reaction. Identification of the sites of reaction was accomplished, in part, by isolation of soluble peptides after chemical degradation of the derivative. The labeled active-site residue responsible for loss of enzymatic activity was not stable to chemical degradation and, therefore, this site was identified by X-ray crystallographic analysis of monocarbamyl-chymo-

monocarbamyl-chymotrypsin A, were readily obtained in a form isomorphous with native and tosyl-chymotrypsin &. The structure of the carbamyl derivative has been determined from crystallographic studies at 2.5-A resolution. The carbamyl group occupies the same region as the carbonyl group of indoleacryloyl-chymotrypsin A, and the sulfonyl group of the tosyl derivative. It is stabilized in a single conformation by a hydrogen-bonding network involving a water molecule, the carbonyl oxygen of the carbamyl group, the peptide carbonyl of Phe-41 and the amide nitrogen of Gly-193. Based on information taken from the carbamyl derivative, the structure of acetyl-chymotrypsin & has been proposed. A detailed knowledge of the orientation of the carbonyl groups of the acyl moieties in the acetyl-enzyme and the indoleacryloyl-enzyme has led to a clearer understanding of the stereochemistry of the deacylation mechanism.

trypsin A,. We are deeply indebted to Dr. David Blow who provided us with the structure factor amplitudes and phase information for the parent structure, tosyl-chymotrypsin A,. 1 Without his contribution this crystallographic study could not have been accomplished. By means of fingerprints of peptide digests Shaw et al. (1964) had presented evidence that the inhibition of chymotryptic activity by potassium cyanate could be linked to a carbamylation of the active-site Ser-195. Our crystallographic study proved this to be the case. Further investigation indicated that the detailed structure of the derivative would have an important bearing on the mechanism of enzyme action. Since the carbamyl derivative is structurally similar to the acetyl-enzyme and the acyl-enzyme itself, it could provide information E-Ser 0

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